Nic - I have tried several of each... and even tried using the breakout
box to create a crossover/null modem but no luck.
Brooke -
Thanks for the insight. I will tear in to it this weekend and see what
I can find.
Thanks.
-Brian
On Fri, 2009-02-20 at 15:33 +1100, Nic McLean wrote:
Brian,
Have you measured the voltages with a scope to see if it may not be a compliance
problem ?
BillWB6BNQ
bjon...@mindspring.com wrote:
Nic - I have tried several of each... and even tried using the breakout
box to create a crossover/null modem but no luck.
Brooke -
Here's an interesting item that one of the guys on the Accutron group
posted. A great Geek item, especially for time nuts.
Daun
From: accutr...@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 7:16 AM
To: Accutrons Group
Subject: [Accutrons] clock
Good
Hello,
just saw this new white paper on network time sync. I think it is really
for mgmt., lets them know this time synchronization is important.
http://www.ins.com/WorkArea/showcontent.aspx?id=2926
/gdb
___
time-nuts mailing list --
John Miles wrote:
Thanks for the confirmation -- I don't believe anyone else has tried it
on
Windows 7 before. Did you have to run it as admin?
Christopher, I imagine there's either a WoW64 compatibility problem or
(more
likely) the unit you're using isn't 100% compatible with Trimble's
Does the Thunderbolt have to be connected to a real serial port to
operate properly with tboltmon.exe and Lady Heather? Or will it run
through a USB to serial adapter such as those manufactured by Belkin and
Byterunner?
Thanks.
Steve K8JQ
___
I am using the Thunderbolt and Lady Heather on WinXP through a USB -
serial adapter with a prolific chipset without any problems.
So it is possible.
Stijn PE1RKS
Steve schreef:
Does the Thunderbolt have to be connected to a real serial port to
operate properly with tboltmon.exe and Lady
In message 499f09e5.4020...@xs4all.nl, S. Nestra writes:
Quite a lot of USB-serial adapters cheat at various levels.
The worst output 0/+5V or +/-2.5V either of which are totally outside the
spec at the receiving end.
The acceptable output +/-5V, which i out of spec for a transmitter, but
The good output +/-9V or more as the spec requires.
According to the official RS232C specifications, the valid voltage range
must be between +/-3V and +/-15V (+/-25V for the first draft). A device that
absolutly require +/-9V is not RS232 compliant. BTW, as you said, some cheap
USB-Serial
'Lady Heather's' Thunderbolt control software
(where does the name come from?) does work quite
well under Windows XP even via Ethernet cable and
an Ethernet to RS232 converter and a virtual com port!
Both ways are running, DOS Window and graphical
Windows.
It is important to set the right com
John
Thanks much for getting my head on straight.
I bought(ugh) a standard rs232 9 pin cable and part of the problem left me.
I was using a Belkin usb to serial adapter(f5u109) but it still gave me a
problem. Switching to a Hawking(h-uc232s) adapter and reloading the drivers
caused all the
Yes, Windows always seems to think a Thunderbolt is an MS mouse. Look back
in the archives about using /Fastdetect in boot.ini (BTW this doesn't work
with WinXP 64 - so I had to disable the serial mouse in the devices).
Dave
-Original Message-
From: time-nuts-boun...@febo.com
Hello, Time-Nutters--
Is there any possibility that opening and closing the
Lady Heather display inflicts some sort of temporary
disturbance to the T-bolt it is monitoring?
If I run the Lady Heather display on my Dell Dimension 9200
desktop screen and let it run undisturbed for 8 or 10
hours, it
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